Back to Search Start Over

High-throughput immunogenetics for clinical and research applications in immunohematology: Potential and challenges

Authors :
Langerak, A
Brüggemann, M
Davi, F
Darzentas, N
Van Dongen, J
Gonzalez, D
Cazzaniga, G
Giudicelli, V
Lefranc, M
Giraud, M
Macintyre, E
Hummel, M
Pott, C
Groenen, P
Stamatopoulos, K
Langerak, AW
Van Dongen, JM
Lefranc, MP
Macintyre, EA
Groenen, PJTA
Langerak, A
Brüggemann, M
Davi, F
Darzentas, N
Van Dongen, J
Gonzalez, D
Cazzaniga, G
Giudicelli, V
Lefranc, M
Giraud, M
Macintyre, E
Hummel, M
Pott, C
Groenen, P
Stamatopoulos, K
Langerak, AW
Van Dongen, JM
Lefranc, MP
Macintyre, EA
Groenen, PJTA
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Analysis and interpretation of Ig and TCR gene rearrangements in the conventional, low-throughput way have their limitations in terms of resolution, coverage, and biases. With the advent of high-throughput, nextgeneration sequencing (NGS) technologies, a deeper analysis of Ig and/or TCR (IG/TR) gene rearrangements is now within reach, which impacts on all main applications of IG/TR immunogenetic analysis. To bridge the generation gap from low- to high-throughput analysis, the EuroClonality-NGS Consortium has been formed, with the main objectives to develop, standardize, and validate the entire workflow of IG/TR NGS assays for 1) clonality assessment, 2) minimal residual disease detection, and 3) repertoire analysis. This concerns the preanalytical (sample preparation, target choice), analytical (amplification, NGS), and postanalytical (immunoinformatics) phases. Here we critically discuss pitfalls and challenges of IG/TR NGS methodology and its applications in hemato-oncology and immunology.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308928650
Document Type :
Electronic Resource